Range Wars: GM Tweaks the 2020 Chevrolet Bolt for Greater Distance

Aside from Tesla fans and aficionados of various European exotics still stuck in development, the chief performance spec that concerns most electric vehicle buyers is not acceleration — it’s range. How many miles will this thing go before stranding me in the dark?

For most buyers on the lower end of things, getting maximum miles for your money is top of mind, and Chevrolet’s Bolt has offered an impressive EPA-rated range of 248 miles since it first rolled off lots in December 2016. Apparently, GM felt that wasn’t enough.

For the 2020 model year, the automaker stated Thursday, the Bolt will travel 259 miles on a charge. This newfound stamina further distances the Bolt from its lower-priced rivals; mainly, the Nissan Leaf Plus (226 miles) and the Tesla Model 3 Standard Range (220 miles) and Standard Range Plus (240 miles).

Hyundai’s new Kona Electric, which saw its first U.S. deliveries in February, boasts a range of — wait for it — 258 miles. Hmmm. Seems GM really wanted to wear a crown.

According to the automaker, the Bolt’s 10-percent range boost came about after Chevy’s battery engineering team “improved the energy of the cell electrodes by making small but impactful changes to the cell chemistry.”

“This innovative thinking allowed the team to implement the range increase without needing to change the physical battery pack and the way it is integrated into the vehicle structure,” GM stated.

While the otherwise unchanged model’s starting price remains at $37,495 for 2020, that doesn’t mean buyers won’t end up spending more. GM saw its $7,500 federal tax credit cut in half last April. Come October 1st, the credit shrinks to $1,875. Unless something happens at the legislative level, Bolt buyers can expect that credit to disappear on April 1st, 2020.

Bolt sales declined in 2018 as new rivals came on the scene; meanwhile, GM moved to boost supply in underserved regions. However, the recent demise of the plug-in Volt hybrid seems to have sent a gust of wind to the Bolt’s sails. Volume is up 5.4 percent over the first half of 2019, with the second quarter’s sales tally coming in 13.8 percent higher than that of the previous year.